I recently revived an older thread (perhaps this was frowned upon, my apologies) which dealt with ejection problems some have experienced with long action Sako 85's. Personally, I thought the issue could use a bit more productive discussion or at least another empirical conclusion I wanted to share, so that others who search for this issue will have a further reference of someone's personal experience. I was lucky enough to have found the links to other forums below, which turned my mind to the issue and to a potential solution, at least one that worked for me.
Links to other potentially useful discussions:
http://www.24hourcampfire.com/ubbthreads/ubbthreads.php/topics/6439384/Sako_85_ejection_failure
http://www.thehighroad.org/archive/index.php/t-731285.html
http://www.fishnhunt.co.nz/forum/YaBB.cgi?action=print&num=1349840960
Today I picked up my 85 Finnlight in .308 after reading repeatedly in the links above that the short action was not afflicted by the same ejection angle issue as the long action and after a helpful fellow at a local gun shop confirmed the ejection issue was not present on the .308. By way of a brief background, I had originally picked up the same rifle in .270win and was immediately troubled by the ejection angle I was observing with A-zoom snap caps. I then read the links above and noticed the .308 owners were consistently saying their rifles were ejecting without issue.
I simply wished to confirm for anyone who might find this post while researching these rifles and this issue that my short action .308 ejects flawlessly at a nice horizontal trajectory at exactly 3 O'Clock. This allows for adequate clean clearance with my Swarovski Z5 3.5-18x44 mounted with "low" optilock rings. The long action .270 was ejecting at closer to 1 O'Clock with a rainbow-like more vertical ejection (before scope was mounted) and hit the bottom of my Swaro every time (when scope was mounted), even when I mounted it with medium rings which were just too high for having proper eye relief while maintaining a good cheek weld.
For my purposes, the .308 makes for a useful and fortunate alternative to the original plans to do a .270 build. The actions being tailored to the round sizes ended up being a lucky and useful design in this unforeseen way. Anyways, maybe those with experience with the magnum actions could comment on those or even some further thoughts from long action owners. Just posting fo the sake of allowing people access to what turned out to be invaluable information for me. If you're looking at these, cycle them and make your own conclusions about whether it works for you.
Links to other potentially useful discussions:
http://www.24hourcampfire.com/ubbthreads/ubbthreads.php/topics/6439384/Sako_85_ejection_failure
http://www.thehighroad.org/archive/index.php/t-731285.html
http://www.fishnhunt.co.nz/forum/YaBB.cgi?action=print&num=1349840960
Today I picked up my 85 Finnlight in .308 after reading repeatedly in the links above that the short action was not afflicted by the same ejection angle issue as the long action and after a helpful fellow at a local gun shop confirmed the ejection issue was not present on the .308. By way of a brief background, I had originally picked up the same rifle in .270win and was immediately troubled by the ejection angle I was observing with A-zoom snap caps. I then read the links above and noticed the .308 owners were consistently saying their rifles were ejecting without issue.
I simply wished to confirm for anyone who might find this post while researching these rifles and this issue that my short action .308 ejects flawlessly at a nice horizontal trajectory at exactly 3 O'Clock. This allows for adequate clean clearance with my Swarovski Z5 3.5-18x44 mounted with "low" optilock rings. The long action .270 was ejecting at closer to 1 O'Clock with a rainbow-like more vertical ejection (before scope was mounted) and hit the bottom of my Swaro every time (when scope was mounted), even when I mounted it with medium rings which were just too high for having proper eye relief while maintaining a good cheek weld.
For my purposes, the .308 makes for a useful and fortunate alternative to the original plans to do a .270 build. The actions being tailored to the round sizes ended up being a lucky and useful design in this unforeseen way. Anyways, maybe those with experience with the magnum actions could comment on those or even some further thoughts from long action owners. Just posting fo the sake of allowing people access to what turned out to be invaluable information for me. If you're looking at these, cycle them and make your own conclusions about whether it works for you.




















































